The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 57, Ed. 2 Friday, August 30, 1940 Page: 4 of 8
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tEheUrtminsv emerald
Tstabllshed a* a Dally Newspaper July 4 1892
_ by Jesse O Wheeler
Published Every Weekday Afternoon at Thirteenth and Adamt Streets
Brownsville Texas.
Entered as Second-Class Matter at the Postoffiee at Brownsville. Texas
Under the Act of Congress of March 3 1879
Publishers BROWNSVILLE HERALD PUBLISHING CO.
Brownsvtue. Texas.
J M STEIN President and General Manager
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FRIDAY. AUGUST 30. 1940
w. W ^ ^ ^ ^
THE RUSSIAN-RUMANIAN FLARE-UP
THE complexities of the Balkan keg of dynamite
which seems likely to blow up at any moment
continue to present their jigg-saw perplexities to the
American newspaper reader. The Balkans historic-
ally start wars and if it is not possible to start them
they proceed to become involved in other people s
wars. Such is the history of the Balkans.
And adding to all the puzzling situations that
have developed in Southeast Europe is the conflict
between Russian and Rumanian troops on the new
Russian-Rumanian border a few days ago in which
several hundred soldiers are reported to have been
killed on both sides. The battle was accompanied
by airplane clashes. Rumania gave up Bessarabia
along her north and east border to Russia. So far
as known Russia which had never given up her claim
to that area won by Rumania in the first World War
mad? no additional demands.
That clash between Russian and Rumanian fron-
tier soldiers may have resulted from some local
border embroilment but there seems to be reason to
suspect that it may be all just a part of another
Russian move to solidify its western front against
that future date when Germany has found herself
free to attend to matters in the east. If it was mere-
ly a local border affair then it is a matter that most
likely will be settled without further bloodshed.
Hitler and Mussolini have agreed that the Hun-
garian-Rumanian squabble over Transylvania must
be amicably settled by September 15. The meeting
Thursday at Vienna between Joachim von Ribben-
trop. the German foreign minister and Count
Galeazzo Ciano the Italian foreign minister with
representatives of Rumania and Hungary indicates
that the axis leaders are determined that there
must be no conflict in the Balkans at least until the
axis powers have settled with Great Britain. Ger-
many is looking to Rumania for oil and other war
supplies and to Hungary for food and she cannot
afford to have the supply lines interfered with by
further wars. Rumania has made concessions to
Russia giving up Ressarabia. and territorial conces-
sions to Bulgaria. King Carol seemed about to give
in on the Hungarian demands and then suddenly
stiffened his attitude. He now agrees to exchange
populations but refuses to concede additional terri-
tory. That seems to be the question which the axis
powers are intent on deciding in the conversations at
Vienna.
Bucharest the capital of Rumania is possibly
the least dependable capital in Europe from a news
standpoint. For this reason it is questionable
whether much dependence may be placed upon a re-
port from there that Russia has warned Rumania to
give up no more territory to Hungary on pain of ac-
tion on the part of Russia. There is no way of tell-
ing whether credence may be given this Bucharest
rumor. If true it might give the key to Russia's in-
tentions. These intentions might include possession
of the Rumanian oil fields. Possessing those oil
fields Russia might use that position either to aid
Germany or to cripple her in her battle for Great
Britain.
AUTOMATIC ATROCITIES
IN sending to the United States pictures of churches.
hospitals schools and humble homes bombed by
the enemy both Britain and Germany try to stress the
brutality of the other.
It is useless. Everybody knows by now this much
about aerial warfare:
1. No bomber. British or German is stupid enough
to waste bombs on targets like those if he can help it.
2. The plain fact is that air bombing is not ac-
curate enough for any bomber to be sure what he
will hit when he pulls the lever. He may aim with
clear conscience at the munitions dump but the
worker s home or the First Methodist Church gets
the bomb.
War and those who have resorted to war must
bear the blame for the death of these innocents the
destruction of these treasures. Atrocity propaganda
when the “atrocities” are the blind and inevitable re-
sult of the kind of war that is waged today is not
going to get anybody anywhere.
«
*
I Views of Other Papers
SURPLUS FARM PRODUCTS
According to latest estimates the
United States and Canada will
have available at the end of the
current season more than one
billion bushels of wheat lor ex-
port and carryover At the same
time the Continent of Europe
will be facing an acute shortage
of wheat the deficiency being es-
timated at 400.000.000 bushels.
However there is slight prospect
that any substantial part of the
huge surplu'es on this side of the
Atlantic will reach the other side so
long as the war continue* and
the blockade holds.
The continental markets normal-
ly take about one third of our ex-
ports of farm products and Oreat
Britain accounts for another third.
But with the former markets clos-
ed the British are also limiting
their imports to urgent needs and
supplying those needs as far as
possible from empire sources. Hence
i it is not surprising that the prices
of wheat cotton anr other agri-
cultural products should fail to
areTlect the stimulus of wartime de-
mands.
The Department bf Agriculture
I leporis that wheat prices in the
I United States have become large
--. j
the'N -
By Paul Mal lqn y7"
VT/ASHINGTON - Hitler s inside
w date for final victory over
England has been Sept. 15. This
Information was brought to the
top here by a U. S. government
employee who was captured by the
Germans at Abbeville and lived
among the German army officers
before he came out tnrough Switz-
erland.
The German officers talked free-
ly before the fall of Prance about
the date Hitler had fixed for its
doom—July 15. They said the en-
tire army was in on a little Joke
on Der Feuhrer and intended to
press France into subjection two
weeks earlier than Hitler antici-
pated. France actually sued for
peace June 28. thereby heighten-
ing the Joke.
Unless Hitler delivers Britan
within the two weeks yet remain-
ing. he will have to deal with a
problem of officer morale as his
army has been thoroughly satur-
ated with the optimistic expects-
! lion.
AN AMERICA** ambassador (not
Bill Bullitti in talking confid-
entially with house members has
predicted the United States will b?
In the war within four months.
His prophesy was founded on
the expectation that Britain would
fall and retreat to Canada which
would automatically force us to
active defense of this hemisphere
in accordance with our commit-
ments.
This isolated opinion Is not
shared generally within officialdom
here. The navy particularly has
been optimistic about British
chances lately.
DEPUBLICAN Congressmen held
| their heads and called for
r.spirin. upon learning of Wendell
Willkie's renunciation of preferred
Coughlin support. Elsewhere there
may have been admiration for Mr.
Willkie's straightforward courage
but among republican pol ticians
there was only mourning that it
might cost the republican ticket
over a million votes. Thf hitherto
unbroken custom of presidential
candidates has been to accept sup-
! port from all quartets even com-
; mumst-s until after election day. j
No one has calculated how many
votes Wlllkle may have gained
from those who will be impressed
by his unique honesty.
—
CONFIDENCE IN government
I figures has been waning since
sioliticians and publicity men in-
stead of economists started hand-
I mg them out. Practice of choosing
alternative statistics which place
th* government activities in the I
most favorable light has come to
be expected. Such estimates as Mr.
Roosevelt's calculation of more!
than 10.000 planes on the way
may arouse smiles nere but not
anger. Mr Roosevelt got his total
by addme on 3436 planes ordered
: before his defense commission was
conceived and 3654 upon which
;c-me advance paper work has been
'done but for which orders have
} not yet been placed. This is what
is known in the political trade
here as political aggrandizement.
But the defense commission pub-
licity office has been lopping over
into the field of more dangerous
rtatistlcal deception. Defense pub-
licity director. Robert Horton
casually announced last Friday the
navy placed an order for 700
Grumman combat ships and news-
papers. including this column pub- 1
lkshed the Information until the
truth came out from Nan- Secre-
tary Knox 5 days later. The navy
had contracted for only 285 com-
bat ships less than half the num-
ber claimed.
Confronting Horton with the
Knox announcement newsmen
succeeded in getting only a denial j
that the TOO combat plane claim
had been made. To amuse them-
selves. newsmen thereupon cir-
culated an affidavit which mas
signed by five or six who heard
Mr Horton speak to the contrary.
The confusion on defense statist-
ics which has now’ followed the
earlier period of secrecy will prob-
ably cause congress to establish a
Joint committee to keep abreast of
and an eye on the defense com-
■ mission.
I
“THE EXODUS from the N*w
Deal is no* over ve* Works j
Progress Director Harrington will
be called back to active duty In
the army shortly unless Mr Roose-
velt can do some inside fixing.
Incidentally departed Commerre
Secretary Hopkins is anxious to be
director of the new draft organ-
ization.
ly Independent of the European
situation since the turn of events 1
in Europe last May. The loan pro-
gram is now the dominant domes-
tic Influence as regards wheat
prices although speculative move-
ments are. of course influenced by
war and crop news. The outlook
for cotton is favorable as regards
domestic consumption but export
prospects in the markets still open
to us are said to be “exceptionally
j unfavorable."
However it should be remem-
bered that our export outlets for
wheat and cot»on had become se-
verely restricted and were being
maintained with the aid of export
subsidies before the outbreak of
war. The war and the continental
blockade have simply aggravated j
surplus problems that have long
oeen the cause oT official head-
aches and have created some new t
ones due to loss of customary out-
lets for tobacco and other prod-
ucts—Washington Post. I
--... - ■■■ ■ ■■
Answers to Your Questions
BY FREIH.RIC J RASKIN
A reader can get the answer to
any queaMon of fact be wru-
ng The bi nwnsvllle Herald In-
rmmation Bureau. Frederic J.
Ha‘km. Director. Washington.
U. C. Please enclose three i3i
tent* for reply.
Q—Why Is the bushmaster called
the terror of the jungle? H. G.
A—'the bushmaster. a member oi
the rattlesnake iamily. is the larg-
[ est and most venomous snake
known sometimes reacning a
length of nine feet. It is the only
snake known to pursue human
beings following its attack with a
series of vicious lunges of its long
i fangs. While it has no rattle the
tail terminates in a horny spur
which when struck against the
ground produces a rattling noise.
Q—Is the cigarette tax deducti-
ble ftom Federal Income lax? W.
M.
| A—The cigarette tax Is a manu-
facturers’ tax and is not deducti-
ble.
Q—Who originated the National
Grange? L. W. J.
A—ihe National Grange or Pa-
trons of Husbandry was founded
December 1867 tn Wasnington D
O by O H Keller of the United
States Department of Agriculture
By 1872 it had begun to spread
widely and in 1875 there were 1.-
.>00.000 members
Q—Is the quotation “Cleanliness
is next to godliness” from the Bi-
ble? w. B. K.
A—It is taken from a sermon bv
John Wesley on Dress and is as
follows: “Certainly this is a duty
not a sin cleanliness is indeed next
to godliness.’’
Q—Where is the highest suspen-
sion bridge in the world? E. S.
A—It is the bridge in Colorado
which spans the Royal George
Canyon. The floor of the bridge
is 1053 feet above the bed of the
Arkansas River. The main span is
880 feet long and the total length
exclusive of approaches is 1360
feet.
Q—Is there any estimate of the
number of missing people in the
t'nited States? H. T. P.
A—A survey by the Federal Bu-
reau of Investigation reveals that
more than 192.700 persons were re-
ported missing last year While a
majority of these were subsequent-
ly located and Identified by law
enforcement and other agencies the
whereabouts of 16.S00 of those miss-
ing still remains a mystery.
Q—On what day of the week was
Abraham Lincoln assassinated? L
S. K.
A—President Lincoln was shot on
Friday <Oood Friday i April 14.
1865 at Fords Theatre in Wash-
ington D. C while attending a
performance of Our American
Cousin."
Q—Are homing pigeon* being
used in the European war? A. F. N
A—Dispatches report that more
than 100 000 pigeons have been
placed in lofts along the Western
Front and will be utilized in carry-
ing messages.
Q—Who first railed Herodotus
••the father of history?” J. B. S.
A—The title was given him by
Cicero.
Q—Where Is Tidewater Virginia?
S. P. I».
A—Tidewater Virginia consists of
four peninsulas averaging 70 miles
in length. Ore of them is the
Eastern Shore which Juts down
from Maryland between the Atlan-
tic Ocean and Chesapeake Bay and
consists of Accomac and Northamp-
ton Counties. The other three pen-
insulas are lormed by the Potomac
Rappahannock York and James
Rivers.
Character Reading
From the Hands
Paimtstrv is an interesting etude
because it h*s all The charm of explo-
ration and discovery If you have nev-
er observed the hand* of your friend*
see how much you can learn of
character and temperament from
them. Next to the face the human
hand Is the most expressive and re-
vealing thing in the world The For-
tune Telling booklet contains explana-
: tions and diagrams which will teach
the beginner how to study character
fiom the hands It tells the meaning
of the square hand of long finger*
shape of finger nails and the mounts
of flesh cushions at the base of the
i Ungers Send in your name and ad-
dress with a dime and your copy
will come to you in an early mall.
—I'M This Coupon-
Information Bureau
The Brownsville Herald
Frederic J. Hatkin. Director.
Washington. D C
I enclose herewith TEN CENTS
in coin icarefully wrapped in pa-
per! for a copv of the FORTUNE
TELLINO BOOKLET
Name
Street or Rural Rout#
City.
State
iMail to Washington D Cl
---1
Harrison
In
Hollywood
By PAIL HARRISON
NEA Service Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD — Behind the
screen: W:th romance news wear-
ing pretty thin the press agents
now report their client*' heart
troubles One announces: 'Mary
Healy and Peter Lind Hayes were to
have eloped during the week-end.
but quarreled Instead.”
The colony's prize e lopement-
tlffers. incidentally are a atudlo
executive and a minor actress. A
charter pilot tells me he flew them
to Las Vegas about a year ago and
that they quarreled en route and
didn’t even get out of the plane
A couple of weeks later they hired
him again. This time they got to
arguing about which was to blame
for the first disagreement and the
gal was so mad she sat up with
the pilot cn the way back
Two months later amid gay
quips from their friends they took
off and got to Las Vega* without
mishap and were quicklv marrtan
The flyer says he met the actress
the other dav and she asked If he
sold commutation tickets. Seems
she’s going back to Nevada for a di-
vorce.
• • •
Albert Morin locally as famous
at ribbing as Vince Barnett was
! lionized at a party at Cary Grant s
house where he was introduced as
a celebrated French director After
squinting at Katharine Hepburn
half the evening he announced that
shf would photograph as well as
Garho. but that she couldn't act.
At that. Mis? Hepburn not only
acted but reacted.
• • •
Limited Showing
Ail American pictures now are
excluded from Germany and Nan-
occupied territory and Italy Is prep-
aring a similar edict. So Europe is
in for an entertainment famine
also... A Jcke cherished by the
Hitler-haters in Prague was this
billing of a propaganda fllln: “The
I-
German Reich Great World Power
—For a Few Days Only."
• • •
Quickest way to make money la
to pick out some star who’s hard
to cast and then think up a story
especially fitted to his or her tal-
ents. Virginia Van Upp and Patter-
son McNutt were thinknig of Hedv
Lamarr when thev spent part of a
day working out an idea about a
girl who cant do anything except
sit around and look beautiful
while events whirl about her At 5
oclock the writers whisked out to
Metro with their plot and next dsv
at 10 a. m. they had a check for
125 000.
• • •
There definitely will be a series
of Tugboat Annie pictures with
Marjone Rambeau in the title role
created by Marie Dressier The film
Just finished looks fine ..As a
weapon against the double bill.
Metro Is experimenting with fea-
turets of two to three reels made
from magazine short stories...
Paramount Is whipping up another
of those mystery productions—care-
fully guarded sets and strict secre-
cy about the plot. I'm not sure
though whether the studio is pro-
tecting -.omcthinc valuable or
merHv hiding its embarrassment
The story—so help me!—Is about a
scientist who transfers the brain
of a man to the great ape.
• . .
Showed C'laudelte Her Place
Clark Gable says of •’Room
Town”; ‘Its got everything in it
except the kidnaping of Charley
Ross".. Claudette Colbert has been
telling of some experiences she had
at the beginning of that picture
When she reached the set. she
found she didn’t have a dressing
room and changed costumes with
the extras the first day. She also
l
THIS CURIOUS WORLD
By Williarr Ferguson
ANSWER: July St ltlC
NF.ST: Why mahogany trees are eut by moonlight.
Walter Winched!/
On Broadway Q
4Tr» 1* 1»4*. Ptllr ]B
By GEORGE LAIT.
Night News Editor of International Newa Aerrlea
Supplying foreign news to the newspapers of America in peace tlma
ha* always been considered a man-sued Job. The same task during *
war time is unmitigated 'deleted by censor*.
Carefully planned and expensive networks of correspondents are
brushed aside by the movements of the warring sides; international n
arrangements which took years of careful intrigue and much seat-
warming in foreign offices to erect cease to exist suddenly as one belli- §
grrau or me omer oorn some mm|
or doesn't do aonething.
• • •
A surrender wipe out a country
an attack wipes out a town an ad-
vance wipes out a city—none-the-
less the American public must be
informed of what's going on
That's the Job of a news service.
And that's why news editors of
news services have sparse thin-
ning locks atop their troubled
craniums.
While Mr W is away basking in
the Summer sunshine I have been
asked to fill this space. Although
I write ream upon ream of copy
each day this is my first oppor-
tunity to get off my chest my own
No. l trouble—aspiring war correa-
pondents.
When the European war broke
out on Sept 3. 1939. more than
5.000 applicutiona poured into the
New York headquarters of Inter-
national News Sen ice from young
• and old» hopefuls throughout the
land who felr themselves qualified
to become war correspondents.
• • •
Some wrote that they .poke
foreign languages others said they |
took swell pictures with their Brow-
nie 2-A's; others Just "knew" they
would be good correspondents be-
cause their English teacher was
proud of their essay; one wrote that
hed be able to get us uncemored
news "because I Just wouldn't
show my stories to the censor. I'd
telegraph my news from some little
out-of-the-way telegraph office
where they'd never think of putting
a censor.'*
Of course you car t answer each
of these thousands of applications
but I do so now.
First oT all you can't play Sto-
kowskis aggregation Just because
you own some tissue paper and a
comb.
War correspondency is a highly
technical Job. requiring vast ex-
perience and background.
Secondly most war correspond-
ents speak several foreign tongues
have lived and worked for years
abroad have valuable connections
and contacts with big people in the
countries to which they are assign-
ed.
• • •
War correspondents DO NOT
TAKE PICTURES There are spe-
cial cameramen purposely trained
lo take war photos and a war cor-
respondent who had to carrv his
own bale of credentials as well as
a similar bale of cameramans
credentials plus a camera—well he
wouldn l be able to walk unassist-
ed.
And you can't beat the censors.
Men with vast experience—H. R.
Knickerbocker. Robert Nixon.
Pierre J Huss. Percy Winner.
Charles A. Smith. Merrill Meuller.
Jim Brown. W W. Chaplin. Ken-
neth Downs. Michael WMlsnn. Mike
discovered she was slated for fourth
Wiling—after Gable. Tracy and Ui-
marr. ‘Such things were very good
Tor me. ’ the star said They show-
ed me I wasn’t nearly as import-
ant as I had thought."
• • •
Paul Muni dismissed by Warners
because he was too important and
too demanding has been hired by
20’h-Fox to star In 'Hudson Bay
Company " It Is assumed that he
will wear a silver fox beard...
There a a player of fast-fading
prominence who has remained idle
a year rather than accept a small-
er wage than he used to receive
Casting directors call him "the
hurhest unpaid actor m Hollywood."
Chlnlgo—all veteran European ror„
respondents can t beat the censor*.
It I* true that occasionally :n*y
manage to -scoop” or -best” the
other correspondents and thu is
particularly true of Knickerbocker
Hus* and Downs But their scoops
and beats receive careful scrutiny 4
of the censor Just the same. Their
schoops result from having better
contacts better background in their
assigned posts than the other cor- ♦
j respondents have.
• • •
International News Sendee cor-
respondents covering the war have
been confronted at times with
seeminglv unsurmount able prob-
lems. and in each instance their
past erperience. their training has
enabled them to pull through with
flying colors—at times to turn their
problem into a substantial advant-
age for themselves and for INS.
Bob Nixon for example was
forced to flee from Dunkerque with
the retreating British fleeing so
fast he left his knapsack and
portable typewriter on the French
oeach. But Nixon s story of the
retreat and his dramatic recital of
the bomb-sinking of tha auxiliary
cruiser Cambodia made journalis-
tic history. And even though his
later dispatch was held up by the f
censors for more than 30 davs IT *
STILL WAS EXCLUSIVE WHEN
FINALLY RELEASED FOR PUB-
LICATION!
• • •
Knickerbocker also is JiLstlv fam- 1
ed for his abllttv to worm out ex-
clusive and startling news from
under the noaes of his colleagues
and for th:s he la virtually pr
scribed by the Naas. His exclusive
on the wealth stored outside of the
Retch bv the big-wigs of the Nart
Party added to his reputation as a
journalist but would make It
mighty vnhealthy for him If the
Germans ever caught up with him.
In spite of this personal danger.
Kmck was one of the last corres-
jjondents to leave France In the face
of the oncoming tide of Oermans
and to the very end of his srtiy in
Bordeaux «when he and Downs
slept on a pile of •"live” torpedoes
piled on a quay i Kmck s dispatcher
were ‘ first with the latest ’ and *|
true to his INS slogan—Got It
First but First Get It Right.”
But all the war correspondency
labor Is not done by the men at
the front There Is an Intricate
network of communicating and re-
lay offices through which the cor- u
respondents' dispatches must pass '
before you read them over tha
breakfast table.
• • •
The principal portion of thH
work b done in the New York
headquarters where a large staff
of specially trained foreign ex-
perts prepare the copy" for actual
transmission to the newspapers.
The set-up is this: A correspond-
ent at.. *ay Dover witnesses a
bombing attack and telegraphs his
report to the INS main London
office In Fleer Street Instantlv
London relays this report to New
York transposing it first into *rsb-
*!■»." a languase of new* MtvtMi
employing contractions and stand- p
ard codified words In order to
shorten the message and thus save
cable transmission costs which
vary from 4SC to 0Or per word: re-
ceived In New York the dispatch
is handed to a cable writer thor- S
oughly familiar with the locale
of the story and with all even *
bearing on this particular piece of
news which preceded the attack
now being reported In surprising-
ly few minutes the cable wr.’er
has written a graphic account of
the attack based on the latest
cable from the correspondent and
upon his Intimate knowledge of p
events which preceded this particu-
lar attack. Then on high-speed
transmitters <teletype! which send
sixty words per minute the storv |
is rushed to your newspaper or ra-
dio station which tells you all
about It.
To aspiring war correspondents
and those who mant to become
foreign correspondents this advice:
You need experience experience
in the domestic news service or
newspaper field before you ran
successfully m-ork abroad as a news
man That's all. brother.
So They Say
The Germans hold the rope and
twist It whenever they consider
the accord is not being carried out.
—Marshal retain. Na. 1 man of
France.
• • •
The right to guide the course
of world history is the noblest
prize of victor?’ v
—British Prime Minister Winston
Churchill
WESLACOANS GO
BAN BENITO — Mr. end Mrs
Henry Mar*»n have returned to
their home in Weslaco after visit- *
ing here mfh Mr. and Mrs. Harold
D Martin and daughters Shirley
Ann and Geraldine The Weslaco
reaidents are parents of the local
man.
FILLERS RETURN
8AN BENITO—Mr and Mrs. Ted
Fuller and daughter. Kay. returned
K»rly thta week from a a cation
trip While awav Mr. Fuller a
lieutenant in the reserves saw c
service in the cast Texas maneuv-
II-4
In This Day And Age The Little Voice Inside Us Is No Longer Our Conscience Exclusioely• There’s Also Pocket Radios.
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The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 57, Ed. 2 Friday, August 30, 1940, newspaper, August 30, 1940; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1405841/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .